All Property Week articles in 18 September 2015 – Page 4
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News
Food and drink operators target London
This year is set to be a record for international food and beverage operators opening in London, with nine new entrants already opened and another four in the pipeline.
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News
Perloff throws down the gauntlet to ‘Marxist’ MPs
In the face of Corbynmania, colourful property entrepreneur Andrew Perloff is something of a political antidote.
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Videos
Rugby star touches down at Greenwood launch
Celebrated rugby player Will Greenwood must have wondered just what he was attending when he was asked to go to the launch of the newly refurbished Greenwood building in Bracknell, being marketed by Savills and DTRE on behalf of a joint partnership between Savills Investment Management and Canmoor.
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Markets
Northshore development project is now on the road to recovery
The Infinity Bridge, a pedestrian and cycle crossing over the River Tees, opened to great fanfare on 14 May 2009. Public celebrations included specially commissioned music, pyrotechnics, free runners and an estimated audience of 20,000 spectators.
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Markets
Developers return to Dublin office market
Cranes are returning to Dublin’s skyline and it is not hard to see why.
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News
Property primed for Rugby World Cup kick-off
With the Rugby World Cup set to begin today, new research from Lambert Smith Hampton has revealed how the tournament’s 13 locations square up on the property front.
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News
Strong demand and limited supply drives up City rents
Continued strong demand and constrained supply in the City of London drove up rents in the second quarter of the year as availability plummeted, Gerald Eve’s latest City Floor Review has found.
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Markets
Tynes are changing as office market surges
Goodness knows it’s been a long time coming, but the Newcastle upon Tyne office market appears to be in good health, with year-on-year figures for the first half of 2015 positive across the board.
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Professional
Is it game, set and match for the future of UK town centres?
The retail industry is in the midst of great change. The internet is accelerating a fundamental shift in people’s thinking about this sector.
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Professional
Milton Keynes shopping centre extension sparks row over neighbourhood plan
Opponents say extension of Intu’s Milton Keynes shopping centre overrides a recently agreed neighbourhood plan.
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News
Lessons from Canada’s devolution experience
Earlier this summer, I had the opportunity to participate in the British Property Federation (BPF) Regional Forums in Bristol and Newcastle.
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News
Game over for Invista European Real Estate as lender calls time
The final chapter closed on Invista European Real Estate this week after the listed company’s mezzanine lender enforced its security by way of a sale to Artillery Investments and DPK Artillery.
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News
Economist to offload West End buildings
The Economist Group has appointed agents to sell its long-standing editorial headquarters in London’s West End for around £135m.
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News
CBRE gets its teeth into pair of Midtown buildings
CBRE Global Investors has purchased two buildings on Gray’s Inn Road in London’s Midtown from property company MHA for around £13m.
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Insight
Solving overheating in buildings is essential
We read with interest your coverage of this year’s RESI Conference, where many key issues were discussed. But there is one major problem that is often missing from the housing agenda: overheating.
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Markets
Morpeth housing development set to benefit white-collar commuters
Around 15 miles to the north of Newcastle, a housing development has recently started on a site that underlines the resurgence of white-collar jobs in the region.
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News
Barnard Marcus result down but not out with London lots
Barnard Marcus raised £17m at its September auction, with sales buoyed by Greater London properties, but down £12m year on year as a result of a smaller catalogue.
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News
Time running out to enter LSH award
There are now less than two weeks remaining to enter the £15,000 LSH Enterprise Award.
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News
Countrywide attributes success to care home sales
Countrywide raised £10.5m at its September auction, bettering last year’s result with the help of two care homes - despite what was described as a “disappointing” sale rate.
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Insight
What lies beneath: Why developers’ attitudes towards archaeological discoveries have shifted
Why they are now seen as less of a hindrance and more of an opportunity?